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Review: ‘Trayf,’ a sweet-natured buddy comedy in a mitzvah van, explores Jewish identity

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A automotive is an important factor of most buddy comedies. In “Trayf,” Lindsay Joelle’s entertaining bromance set in and round New York’s Orthodox Jewish group, the car of selection is a mitzvah van.

The play, which opened March 10 on the Geffen Playhouse’s intimate Audrey Skirball Kenis Theater, constructs an uncommon friendship triangle: Zalmy (Ilan Eskenazi) and Shmuel (Ben Hirschhorn), two 18-year-old Hasidic Jews from Brooklyn’s Crown Heights neighborhood, encounter a misplaced soul named Jonathan (Garrett Younger) when driving round Manhattan of their “tank” on one in every of their missions to rescue Jews who’ve misplaced contact with their religion.

A clerk at a well-liked Decrease Manhattan music retailer, Jonathan has not too long ago discovered that the daddy he’s nonetheless grieving was a Holocaust survivor. This data helps him join a few of the traumatic dots of his household, however he’s unsure find out how to embrace his newly found Jewish heritage.

Zalmy, ablaze with curiosity about life outdoors his non secular group, takes Jonathan, who was raised Catholic, below his wing. He invitations his damaged and bereaved new pal residence to Brooklyn for Shabbat dinner, welcoming him right into a tradition of rigorous custom that’s particularly comforting to somebody who hasn’t recognized his roots.

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In change, Zalmy will get to ask Jonathan, who’s about 10 years older and infinitely extra worldly, about intercourse in licentious Manhattan. He additionally faucets into Jonathan’s information of pop music, one other taboo topic of infinite fascination.

The 12 months is 1991, so mixtapes — within the type of precise cassettes — play a significant position. Jonathan, who’s grateful that somebody is guiding his path to turning into an observant Jew, makes compilations that Zalmy smuggles into his room like treasured contraband.

Secular music is forbidden. Shmuel is shocked to be taught that Zalmy, his finest pal since childhood, even is aware of the title Elton John, by no means thoughts any of the artist’s songs. “Whenever you hear music, the soul of one other is within the room,” he says. “So I don’t desire a goyishe songwriter needs to be coming into my soul and trayfing up the place!”

“Trayf,” which describes meals prohibited by kosher legislation, is grammatically redeployed to underscore the hazards of assimilation. Shmuel lives in such a bubble that he has solely a toddler’s understanding of the workings of sexual activity. The prospect of romantic love pales in depth to the platonic affection he feels for his mitzvah tank “first mate.” He reminds Zalmy of non secular proscriptions out of concern of dropping the individual dearest to him in all of the world.

The dynamics of this trio are noticed by Joelle with a full of life wit and genial knowledge. As Jonathan turns into extra fanatical in his quest to be accepted as a convert, Zalmy grows extra preoccupied with the profane pleasures of curler disco and musical theater. Shmuel, seething with suspicion, secretly follows Zalmy on one in every of his fugitive outings. He’s horrified to be taught that his pal not solely attended a Broadway efficiency of “Fiddler on the Roof” however eliminated his yarmulke after the present.

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Though fraught with jealousy, these male relationships are suffused with a fragile tenderness. A boyish innocence underlies “Trayf.” Eskenazi’s Zalmy has a welcoming smile that places one in thoughts of Miranda exclaiming on the finish of Shakespeare’s “The Tempest,” “O courageous new world that has such folks in’t!” When Hirschhorn’s Shmuel appears to be like at Zalmy, his eyes exude a love that defies class.

Younger’s Jonathan is tougher to position. A slacker in demeanor, he seems to be extraordinarily punctilious in issues of religion. The zeal of the convert skids into fanaticism, however there’s one thing touching in regards to the character’s flailing seek for deeper which means.

The manufacturing, directed by Maggie Burrows on a spare and easy set by Tim Mackabee, acknowledges that the energy of the play lies within the emotional attachments of those younger males. The geography of the staging, sketched by a bench and a few chairs, might be laborious to trace. It’s not all the time clear if a second is happening contained in the mitzvah van, on a patio or on a road nook. However the actors vibrantly map out the interior terrain of their characters.

Joelle is simpler in establishing the dramatic battle than in resolving it. “Trayf” stalls on the hour mark. A fourth character is launched, Leah (Louisa Jacobson), Jonathan’s estranged girlfriend, who brings a extra progressive Jewish perspective to the story. Jacobson makes essentially the most of her one scene, however the playwright discards Leah and her difficult questions on non secular and cultural id.

Earlier within the play, Shmuel takes up the difficulty of what makes an individual a Jew. His reply, “a Jewish soul,” is tautological. Leah, in her temporary look, dismantles this mentality. However Joelle, skirting the bigger philosophical conundrums raised by her characters, settles for a comic book ending during which tough issues are dismissed with a heartwarming picture.

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It’s enjoyable eavesdropping on these dudes of their mitzvah tank. However after whetting my urge for food, “Trayf” left me hungering for extra substantive non secular nourishment.

‘Trayf’

The place: Audrey Skirball Kenis Theater on the Geffen Playhouse, 10886 Le Conte Ave., L.A.

When: 8 p.m. Tuesdays-Fridays, 3 and eight p.m. Saturdays, 2 and seven p.m. Sundays. Ends April 10

Tickets: $39-$129 (topic to alter)

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Contact: (310) 208-2028 or geffenplayhouse.org

Operating time: 1 hour, 20 minutes (no intermission)

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Summer Camp (2024) – Movie Review

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Summer Camp (2024) – Movie Review

Summer Camp, 2024.

Written and Directed by Castille Landon.
Starring Diane Keaton, Kathy Bates, Alfre Woodard, Eugene Levy, Beverly D’Angelo, Victoria Rowell, Maria Howell, Dennis Haysbert, Nicole Richie, Josh Peck, Betsy Sodaro, Tom Wright, Ray Santiago, Taylor Madeline Hand, Kensington Tallman, Gabe Sklar, Lindsey Blanchard, Artemis Davis, Gabrielle Days, and Zachary Connor.

SYNOPSIS:

Follows Nora, Ginny, and Mary, three childhood best friends who used to spend every summer at a sleep away camp together. After years, when the opportunity to get back together for a summer camp reunion presents itself, they all seize it.

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There is value in exploring time-tested friendships in old age, but for whatever reason, movies like Summer Camp are less concerned with depicting characters who feel human navigating believable drama and more fixated on going for cheap, lazy laughs that typically play up the silliness of elderly shenanigans.

These movies almost always seem to feature Diane Keaton, who is arguably the worst offender when it comes to playing characters over the top. Naturally, this is frustrating since co-stars Kathy Bates, Alfre Woodard, and Eugene Levy are at least bringing something authentic and relatable to their roles even if, at the end of the day, this is a ridiculous film about someone who secretly spends a quarter-million to reunite with cherished childhood friends who have struggled to stay in touch across the 50 years since they aged out of the titular summer camp.

That would be Jenny, a successful author of aggressively forward self-help books, now going by Ginny. Since childhood, she was always the one eager to live life freely whilst saving her new friends at summer camp from being bullied by the pretty girls, coming out of their shells, and trying out various activities like archery (which doesn’t go well and immediately gets a supervisor injured as a lame attempt at comedy.) Those friends are Diane Keaton’s Nora, who would go on to become a highly educated biochemist putting work before life, and Mary (Alfre Woodard), a nurse who gave up on more ambitious dreams of becoming a doctor to settle on married life that grew loveless and more like a second job over time.

Everyone is coming to the summer camp reunion, including past crush Stevie D (Eugene Levy, playing a likable wise gentleman) and even the bullies led by Beverly D’Angelo’s Jane. There is also an overexcited guard (Betsy Sodaro) put to the test as this is a movie where intended comedy comes from food fights breaking out, among other eye-rolling set pieces. Then there is a bumbling counselor, played by Josh Peck, who keeps getting reassigned to monitor different activities, constantly screwing things up in ways that, apparently, are also meant to be funny.

Written and directed by Castille Landon, the lessons shoved in one’s face throughout Summer Camp are nothing new for this subgenre and, unfortunately, come with the same flaws that generally sink these types of movies. Nora needs to be reminded how to ignore work and have fun (not happy about handing over all electronic devices at the camp, unable to check work-related emails). Mary needs to realize that her husband is nothing more than a dependent manchild who has deprived her of enjoying time with friends, and Ginny must realize that her readers are not the only ones who could use some reflection and self-help.

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Smartly, there doesn’t appear to be a true primary character focus here, allowing the three friends ample time to reveal more about their lives while hanging out with others. Castille Landon doesn’t perceive them as more important to someone else. There are also a small handful of effective moments, whether it be from Mary arguing with her husband as he shows up to forcibly bring her home or Stevie vulnerably detailing how an obsessive dedication to work wasn’t worth it and how he now enjoys regularly spending time with his family even if he doesn’t necessarily like what they are doing for fun on any given day.

Summer Camp has nuggets of wisdom buried under atrocious humor, sometimes made more groan-worthy by the corniest needle drops. With a rewrite or two taking the material more seriously (which doesn’t mean eliminating jokes entirely), there is an interesting, refreshing story about old-age friendship to be told here. Instead, we get jokes about deer shit, Diane Keaton cluelessly using technology (which makes no damn sense considering how intelligent the character is supposed to be), and ham-fisted messaging. 

Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★

Robert Kojder is a member of the Chicago Film Critics Association and the Critics Choice Association. He is also the Flickering Myth Reviews Editor. Check here for new reviews, follow my Twitter or Letterboxd, or email me at MetalGearSolid719@gmail.com

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=embed/playlist

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Jerry Seinfeld misses 'dominant masculinity' — so the internet trolled him with his own career

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Jerry Seinfeld misses 'dominant masculinity' — so the internet trolled him with his own career

For Jerry Seinfeld, Sean Connery and Muhammad Ali were among the men who exemplified the “dominant masculinity” of the early ’60s. For his social media critics, the “Seinfeld” comedian does not.

“Ah yes, when I think Dominant Masculinity, I think Jerry Seinfeld,” one X (formerly Twitter) user sarcastically tweeted. “LMAO. It’s so transparent that the most insecure people always project this stuff.”

The “Unfrosted” star and director, 70, is facing a new round of social media backlash after he shared his views on masculinity, culture and social “hierarchy” in an interview with Free Press editor Bari Weiss. On Tuesday’s episode of Weiss’ “Honestly” podcast, Seinfeld said his nostalgia for the ’60s, for “a common culture” and more influenced his Netflix Pop-Tart film.

“There’s another element there that I think is the key element, and that is an agreed upon hierarchy, which I think is absolutely vaporized in today’s moment,” he said.

He added that his desire “to be a real man” growing up adds to the longing he feels for that era. In addition to Ali and Connery, President John F. Kennedy was a “real man” Seinfeld said he wanted to emulate.

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“I want to be like that someday … I never really grew up,” he said. “You don’t want to, as a comedian, because it’s a childish pursuit, but I miss a dominant masculinity. Yeah, I get the [toxic masculinity], but still, I like a real man.”

Seinfeld, who has been vocal about how he feels “the extreme left and P.C. crap” are hurting comedy, was swiftly met online with backlash — and pictures of his memorable “Seinfeld” puffy shirt. “Yes the ‘dominant masculinity’ for which Jerry Seinfeld is well known…,” author Sarah Kendzior captioned a .GIF of Seinfeld in the frilly garment.

“This is my kind of dominant masculinity,” joked another X user who posted a photo of the comic wearing the puffy shirt in a “Seinfeld” episode with co-star Michael Richards.

One user shared photos of Seinfeld’s other over-the-top “Seinfeld” looks, while writer Rohita Kadambi joked that Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ Elaine Benes smoking a cigar on the show is actually the definition of “Seinfeld Dominant Masculinity.”

Several X users also took shots at Seinfeld making his living off stand-up comedy and movie projects including “Bee Movie” and “Unfrosted.”

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“The guy who gave us the bee movie wants more dominant masculinity 💀,” one critic said.

Seinfeld’s “dominant masculinity” comments also offered some users an opportunity to revisit the comedian’s controversial dating history. In the ’90s, Seinfeld dated Shoshanna Lonstein. He was 38 and she was 17 and a high school senior when they met.

“Saying he misses dominant masculinity is the first thing he’s ever said that made me laugh,” writer Rachel Wolf tweeted.

“A man who dated a 17 year old in high school when he was nearly 40 years old can never talk about ‘dominant masculinity’,” another X user said.

But a few people online supported Seinfeld and his views. One X user said they agreed to Seinfeld’s call for real men, which they said is “for the love of natural women who need you all.” In the YouTube comments section of the podcast video, several viewers expressed enjoyment of Seinfeld’s “insight and perspective” and lauded Weiss.

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Several viewers also praised Seinfeld for tearing up while recalling a recent trip to Israel, which he said was “the most powerful experience of my life.” Earlier this month, during two public appearances, Seinfeld — a vocal supporter of Israel amid its ongoing war against Hamas in Gaza — was interrupted by pro-Palestinian protesters.

During his “Honestly” conversation, Seinfeld also spoke about how he moved forward from negative reviews about “Unfrosted,” about his love for New York City and why he doesn’t mind those protesters.

“It’s so silly. They want to express this sincere intense rage, but again, a little off-target,” he said. “That’s, to me, comedic.”

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‘Atlas’ movie review: Jennifer Lopez carries Netflix’s AI sci-fi, but the script is dead weight

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‘Atlas’ movie review: Jennifer Lopez carries Netflix’s AI sci-fi, but the script is dead weight

NOW STREAMING ON:

Artificial Intelligence is out to nuke the world, but not if a (checks notes) data analyst has anything to say about it in Atlas, now streaming on Netflix worldwide. This should be both topical and fun, and star Jennifer Lopez and director Brad Peyton (San Andreas, Rampage) initially seem up to the task. But they fail to shoulder the burden of a incredibly dull and shockingly unimaginative script.

Atlas opens in an unspecified future where interstellar travel is now possible, and the Los Angeles skyline has a few new skyscrapers, including Prague’s TV Tower. Three decades back, an artificial being named Harlan (a robotically over-the-top Simu Liu) became sentient and attempted to wipe out humanity, killing three million people before taking it on the lam across the galaxy, Roy Batty-style.

Lopez is the titular Atlas Shepherd, who has a special connection to Harlan: she’s his sister! Yes, mom (Lana Parrilla) “invented” Harlan before he went genocidal, and so Atlas now bears her burden, hunting the robot across the universe. In an early scene, she finally locates him after tricking AI associate Casca Decius (Abraham Popoola) into giving up the intel using this one simple trick all robots and 9-year-old children hate.

Harlan’s hiding out in the Andromeda Galaxy, just a short 2.5 million light year ride from Earth. So here’s the plan, formulated by stodgy General Jake Boothe (Mark Strong) and gung-ho Colonel Elias Banks (Sterling K. Brown): fly a planet-destroying nuclear payload to Harlan’s hideout… but only as Plan B. Instead, capture Harlan alive for, uh, reasons. Nevermind that by the time you need to employ Plan B, Harlan will have his hands on a nuclear payload capable of destroying Earth.

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We have questions. It’s established in the early scenes with Casca that you cannot “kill” AI. You can kill their physical form, but not the intelligence that forever lives on a cloud. And even the physical form can be easily replicated. So what’s the point of the mission? Isn’t the threat AI sentience itself, and not the physical Simu Liu robot?

Anyway, Atlas herself, the Jack Ryan in this sci-fi Clancyverse, joins the mission as the world’s foremost Harlan expert. Despite a deep mistrust of AI, she soon discovers that her only chance of survival will be to bond with an AI operating system named Smith (voiced by Gregory James Cohan) that operates her giant mech suit.

Helpfully, this AI bond between Atlas and Smith is displayed for the audience in a LED bar that slowly rises during the course of the movie, reaching the crucial 100 percent when Atlas opens up via climactic expository dialogue. Even though, we assume, the AI can read her mind at all times. What’s the point of the neural link if she needs to tell Smith everything verbally?

Atlas is at its modest best during scenes with Lopez alone in the mech, slowly forming a bond with the artificial intelligence. Smith asks her whether she likes pie or cake, and harvests an alien flower for her. Awww. Nevermind that the last AI system she bonded with ended up killing millions of people. They must have patched the genocide bug with this newest update.

There is some fun to be had in a big, schlocky would-be sci-fi epic like this, but Atlas takes itself way too seriously with big teary-eyed speeches and emotional swells on the soundtrack. Lopez is more than capable of carrying something like this, but she doesn’t seem to know what kind of movie she’s in; one could imagine frequent Peyton collaborator Dwayne Johnson bringing the right kind of self-awareness to the role.

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Atlas looks mostly great, with a certain car commercial slickness, though even the high production values seem to abandon the film as it climaxes in a hopelessly pedestrian nondescript warehouse on this strange new alien world. Netflix spent an alleged $100 million on this movie, but by the finale, it might as well be Cosmic Sin.

Worst of all, Atlas fails to capitalize on the topical subject that supposedly drives its narrative. AI can be both bad and good, it seems to be saying, as it argues for acceptance of the technology. Of course, when the bad is the deaths of millions and the good is the preservation of a flower and a friendly how-do-you-do, we wonder if JLo isn’t too hasty in learning stop worrying and love the algorithm.

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